Edinburgh Rugby v Connacht Rugby Preview: Play-Off Rugby, pressure and a season on the line
Connacht head to the Hive Stadium knowing that only a win will keep their URC play-off hopes alive after a remarkable late-season progression under Stuart Lancaster.
Final day drama as Connacht chase Top Eight
Friday night at the Hive Stadium looks like one of the biggest Connacht Rugby games in years.
A packed traveling support is expected in Edinburgh. The URC table is incredibly tight. Qualification for the Champions Cup remains relevant. Knockout rugby is still possible. And after looking dead and buried earlier in the season, Connacht suddenly arrive in Scotland as arguably the in-form team in the entire league.
The equation is quite simple.
Win first. Then, the hope that results elsewhere will take place.
Connacht head into the final round of the BKT United Rugby Championship ranked 9th with 49 points, just one point outside the top eight. Cardiff Rugby and Ulster Rugby are both sitting on 50, while Munster are on 51 ahead of their huge clash with the Lions.
This was one of the closest URC finishes in years. Only two points separate the top three teams in the competition, while only a bonus point win separates 4th place from 9th. Five teams are fighting for the four remaining play-off places, and in the league, almost every Friday night game has huge consequences.
For Connacht, however, none of that matters unless they beat Edinburgh.
From almost eliminated to one of the URC’s in-form teams
What makes Connacht’s current position remarkable is how improbable it seemed only a few months ago.
At the start of 2026, the play-offs seemed well and truly over. Performances were inconsistent, away form was poor, injuries were mounting and the season seemed to be drifting towards a disappointing mid-table finish.
Instead, Stuart Lancaster’s side completely transformed their campaign.
Connacht arrive in Edinburgh after winning seven of their last eight URC matchesa run that has rekindled confidence across the province and brought them back into contention for knockout rugby.
| Date | Opposition | Place | Result | For | Against |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 13, 2026 | Scarlets | Dexcom Stadium | Won | 31 | 14 |
| March 20, 2026 | Ulster | Aviva Stadium | Won | 26 | 19 |
| March 28, 2026 | Ospreys | Dexcom Stadium | Won | 21 | 14 |
| April 18, 2026 | DHL Stormers | DHL Stadium | Won | 33 | 24 |
| April 25, 2026 | Lions | Ellis Park | Lost | 21 | 33 |
| May 9, 2026 | Munster | Dexcom Stadium | Won | 26 | 7 |
This end-of-season surge completely changed the atmosphere within the club. The away win over the DHL Stormers in Cape Town was arguably Connacht’s standout performance under Lancaster so far, while last weekend’s dismantling of Munster felt like a declaration that this team now truly has a place in the play-off conversation.
More importantly, Connacht suddenly look balanced. Earlier in the season, there were times when they looked loose defensively and vulnerable physically. However, over the past couple of months they have become much harder to break.
Cian Prendergast has established himself as one of the best flanker forwards in the league, Shamus Hurley-Langton continues to produce massive defensive shifts, while Sean Jansen’s carrying and troubleshooting work has become central to the Connacht pack.
Behind them, Ben Murphy brought calm control to the scrum-half position, while Bundee Aki’s influence and leadership grew enormously during the run.
There is now a real feeling that Lancaster’s systems are finally fully integrated.
Hive Stadium has always been a problem
Despite Connacht’s form, getting to Edinburgh remains one of the URC’s most difficult missions.
Connacht have won just once in their last nine trips to Scotland in the competition – a 37-26 victory over Edinburgh in October 2020.
Recent meetings between the teams show just how difficult this match was:
| Date | Fixing | Place | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| October 25, 2020 | Edinburgh v Connacht | Murrayfield | 26-37 |
| March 13, 2021 | Connacht v Edinburgh | Dexcom Stadium | 14-15 |
| March 4, 2022 | Edinburgh v Connacht | Beehive Stadium | 56-8 |
| March 25, 2023 | Connacht v Edinburgh | Dexcom Stadium | 41-26 |
| November 11, 2023 | Edinburgh v Connacht | Beehive Stadium | 25-22 |
| May 10, 2025 | Connacht v Edinburgh | Dexcom Stadium | 21-31 |
Connacht’s only win in the last five meetings came away to Galway in March 2023. That 56-8 defeat at the Hive Stadium in 2022 still remains one of Connacht’s worst URC performances in recent memory.
Edinburgh themselves also arrive in good form, winning four URC matches in a row before Friday night.
Markets swing sharply towards Connacht
One of the most interesting developments this week was the reaction of bookmakers to the team announcements.
Connacht initially opened as slight favorites towards -1but the line quickly moved towards -5 and now, after Edinburgh named a particularly young team, there is even a feeling in some markets that the handicap could increase further before kick-off depending on the late money and confidence around the Connacht selection.
This is a huge change for a visiting team traveling to Scotland and it shows how highly people now rate Connacht’s current form.
This also reflects the composition of the Edinburgh team. The Scots have named a team with an average age of just 25, while seven players on Matchday 23 are aged 21 or younger. Fifteen members of the team are from the Edinburgh academy system.
This youth gives Edinburgh energy and enthusiasm, but also inexperience in a high-pressure match against a team fighting for their season.
Edinburgh’s ‘Change The Game’ party adds excitement
Friday’s match is Edinburgh Rugby’s annual Change The Game, with the club hoping to raise a historic £70,000 for official charity partner It’s Good 2 Give.
This should create a great atmosphere at the Hive Stadium, especially with Connacht supporters expected to travel in large numbers.
Sean Everitt’s side made four changes, with Magnus Bradbury returning at number 8, Marshall Sykes coming in as a second row, Tom Dodd starting at blindside and Piers O’Conor coming in at midfield.
Grant Gilchrist is out through injury after suffering a finger problem last weekend against Dragons RFC.
Even with a young selection, Edinburgh remains dangerous at home and has already beaten strong teams there this season.
Mikey Yarr’s Potential Debut Adds Brilliant Storyline
One of the standout inclusions in Connacht’s squad is academy hooker Mikey Yarr, who could make his senior debut off the bench.
Yarr is a highly regarded player in Irish rugby circles. The former Blackrock College player represented Ireland U20s in two separate seasons, which is relatively rare at this level, but his progress was severely curtailed by a serious injury at the Junior World Cup which kept him sidelined until November.
Since his return, there has been huge positivity around his performances in training.
Clearly, Yarr has been tearing it up over the last few months and now finds himself potentially one replacement away from a senior start in one of Connacht’s most important games in recent seasons.
It’s the kind of story rugby fans love. A young academy player recovering from an injury. Knockout rugby in play. Huge crowd outside. Massive pressure. And possibly a first selection in E pod.
Lancaster keeps changes minimal
Connacht make just three changes from the team that demolished Munster last weekend.
Injuries to Dylan Tierney-Martin and Darragh Murray force Eoin de Butléar and Joe Joyce into the starting line-up, while British and Irish Lion Finlay Bealham returns to the tight spot.
Otherwise, Lancaster sticks to continuity and momentum.
Connacht rugby team
15. Sam Gilbert
14. Shane Jennings
13. Harry West
12. Bundee Aki
11. Shayne Bolton
10. Josh Ioane
9. Ben Murphy
1. Billy Bohan
2. John of Butler
3. Finlay Belham
4. Joe Joyce
5. Josh Murphy
6. Cian Prendergast (C)
7. Shamus Hurley-Langton
8. Sean Jansen
Substitutes: Mikey Yarr*, Peter Dooley, Sam Illo, David O’Connor, Paul Boyle, Matthew Devine, Jack Carty, Seán Naughton.
The bench could be extremely important. Jack Carty’s experience could become crucial in a tight final quarter, while Paul Boyle and Sam Illo will provide a major impact against a young Edinburgh pack.
Last weekend’s chaos across the URC
The larger picture of the URC only adds to the drama.
- Glasgow Warriors and DHL Stormers are separated by one point at the top.
- Leinster still have a chance of finishing in the top two.
- Munster host the Lions in a huge play-off clash.
- Cardiff, Ulster and Connacht are separated by a single point.
- Two places for the home quarter-finals remain up for grabs.
- Qualifications for the Champions Cup remain completely open.
This is exactly what the URC wants its final weekend to look like: meaningful rugby everywhere.
Prediction
Connacht comes at exactly the right time.
Seven wins in eight matches. Confidence regained. Physical condition has improved. A well-tuned spine across the team. A real momentum behind them.
Edinburgh’s young side will bring energy and emotion, especially at home, but Connacht now look like a team that understands how they want to play.
The biggest question is whether they can finally handle the pressure of away expectations in a match that everyone expects of them.
If they produce anything close to the intensity they showed against Munster, they should have enough quality and experience to come out on top.
Prediction: Edinburgh Rugby 19-28 Connacht Rugby
The position Edinburgh Rugby v Connacht Rugby Preview: Play-Off Rugby, pressure and a season on the line appeared first on SportsNewsIreland.


























